Kao Kalia Yang talks about her recently published memoir, âWhere Rivers Part,â which is about her motherâs life. [View in browser](~/AAAAAQA~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)|[nytimes.com](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0SyaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3JmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTExODc0NSZubD1yYWNlJTJGcmVsYXRlZCZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTYyMDg1JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0QgpmBl2tBmYWSlGVUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAM~)[Continue reading the main story](#) [Ad](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0SZaHR0cHM6Ly9saXZlaW50ZW50Lm5ld3lvcmt0aW1lc2luZm8uY29tL2NsaWNrP3M9MjA3NTgwJmxpPVJSJm09YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcD1SUl8yMDI0MDMyOSZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UlMkZyZWxhdGVkJmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5VwNueXRCCmYGXa0GZhZKUZVSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAw~~) [Race/Related](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0TAaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc3BvdGxpZ2h0L3JhY2U_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9MzcmZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAyNDAzMjkmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9MTE4NzQ1Jm5sPXJhY2UlMkZyZWxhdGVkJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD0xNjIwODUmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmYGXa0GZhZKUZVSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAw~~) March 29, 2024 [In a black-and-white photo, the author Kao Kai Yangâs mother is in a floral blouse and holding up an infant Yang, who is in a diaper and a white shirt.]
The author Kao Kai Yang as an infant with her mother. Kao Kalia Yang
A mission to immortalize the stories of the Hmong [Author Headshot](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0TBaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vYnkvbWFpYS1jb2xlbWFuP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3JmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTExODc0NSZubD1yYWNlJTJGcmVsYXRlZCZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTYyMDg1JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0QgpmBl2tBmYWSlGVUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAM~) By [Maia Coleman](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0TBaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vYnkvbWFpYS1jb2xlbWFuP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3JmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTExODc0NSZubD1yYWNlJTJGcmVsYXRlZCZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTYyMDg1JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0QgpmBl2tBmYWSlGVUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAM~) Stories are precious currency for Kao Kalia Yang, a Hmong American writer. Yang was born in the Ban Vinai refugee camp in Thailand in the wake of the Vietnam War and the Laotian civil war. Growing up, she often found hope in the stories her grandmother recounted about life in Laos before the war â stories about highland villages where soaring birds cut silhouettes against the jagged mountainside and about family members she had never met. These memories opened up the world for Yang, cementing a geographic and cultural identity beyond the bamboo huts of the camp. âI had been trained in the form of the story at the feet of my elders,â she said in a recent interview. âIt was just a matter of translation.â Yangâs family was one of many who fled Laos after 1975, when the communist government took power. During the Vietnam War, [the C.I.A. recruited the Hmong](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0TTaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAwNy8xMi8xNy93b3JsZC9hc2lhLzE3bGFvcy5odG1sP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3JmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTExODc0NSZubD1yYWNlJTJGcmVsYXRlZCZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTYyMDg1JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0QgpmBl2tBmYWSlGVUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAM~) to join its fight against communism in Laos in a campaign now known as the âsecret war.â After America withdrew, [the Hmong were persecuted](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0ThaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAwNy8xMi8xNi93b3JsZC9hc2lhLzE2aWh0LWxhb3MuMS44NzYzOTc2Lmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9MzcmZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAyNDAzMjkmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9MTE4NzQ1Jm5sPXJhY2UlMkZyZWxhdGVkJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD0xNjIwODUmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmYGXa0GZhZKUZVSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAw~~) for their involvement with the U.S., and many, including her family, fled to the jungles of Laos before escaping as refugees to Thailand and eventually being resettled in countries around the world. The Yangs immigrated in 1987 to St. Paul, Minnesota, which today has one of the largest populations of diasporic Hmong in America. As a child in the Midwest, Yang struggled to speak English and turned instead to writing, where the words flowed freely. In her senior year at Carleton College, shortly after her the death of her grandmother, all the stories that had animated Yangâs childhood crystallized into something more tangible. She began writing what would become her first book, âThe Latehomecomer,â the first memoir by a Hmong American to receive national distribution. Written as a âlove letterâ to her grandmother, the memoir is the first in a trilogy about her family, and set in motion a pursuit that has guided Ms. Yangâs work since: to immortalize the stories of the Hmong, a people who have been underrepresented in literature and history. The final memoir in that trilogy, âWhere Rivers Part,â about her motherâs life, was published this month. Narrated from the first-person perspective of Yangâs mother, the book follows her from her childhood in 1960s Laos, through her escape and her marriage to Yangâs father and, finally, to the unfamiliar life she begins in the U.S. Yang spoke to The New York Times about the book. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Why did you choose the memoir form to tell this story? Memoir, in this country, has always been in the realm of the rich and the famous. We read memoirs to learn about the lives of illustrious people. Iâm writing these memoirs about poor people, men and women who are often overlooked. In many ways, I hope that my body of work is democratizing the form and the genre. [Continue reading the main story](#a11y-skip-universal-0) ADVERTISEMENT [Ad](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0SZaHR0cHM6Ly9saXZlaW50ZW50Lm5ld3lvcmt0aW1lc2luZm8uY29tL2NsaWNrP3M9MTc0MTQ5JmxpPVJSJm09YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcD1SUl8yMDI0MDMyOSZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UlMkZyZWxhdGVkJmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5VwNueXRCCmYGXa0GZhZKUZVSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAw~~) Iâve always loved memoir because I live in the realm of memories. I was a kid born in a camp. I couldnât go to school. I couldnât read or write. Memoirs opened up my world in phenomenal ways, and it was always through memories. A piece of my heart wants to be able to do that for my readers. I studied creative nonfiction writing at Columbia and read a lot of memoirs and nonfiction, but I read a lot about war. The depictions of war have always been mostly by white men. I wanted to add to that. Iâm Hmong. Weâre pretty much absent from the history books. A long time ago our written language was taken from us, and so weâve had to live only with the help of the oral tradition. I feel like Iâve been reunited with a tool and I want to use it to do as much good as I can. How do you see this memoir fitting into your larger body of work? In my head, in my heart, it was always going to be the closing story in the trilogy. I wanted to do my motherâs story for a long time, in large part because my mother is so quiet and people often donât understand her. They look at her and they see this refugee woman. [Continue reading the main story](#a11y-skip-universal-0) ADVERTISEMENT [Ad](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0SZaHR0cHM6Ly9saXZlaW50ZW50Lm5ld3lvcmt0aW1lc2luZm8uY29tL2NsaWNrP3M9MjA3NTc3JmxpPVJSJm09YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcD1SUl8yMDI0MDMyOSZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UlMkZyZWxhdGVkJmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5VwNueXRCCmYGXa0GZhZKUZVSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAw~~) Sheâs this woman with incredible pride. In such an imperfect world, my mother is a perfectionist. That part of her is intact, even through all of this. She married a man who lives somewhere in the ether of dreams. My mom is constantly holding the hard reality. She is the one who uses WIC vouchers at the grocery store and the one who disappears so that we can have Christmas because sheâs gone to Toys for Tots. I see so many other mothers like her in the world. [A woman in a red shirt and a green and white skirt stands in a sunny field carrying a red umbrella with a black border. It is the cover of the writer Kao Kalia Yangâs memoir âWhere Rivers Part.â]
The cover of the writer Kao Kalia Yangâs memoir âWhere Rivers Part.â Kao Kalia Yang One of the central forces in the book is this invisible American hand that catalyzes so much of the conflict that the characters face. Who is the character of America in the memoir? [Continue reading the main story](#a11y-skip-universal-0) ADVERTISEMENT [Ad](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0SZaHR0cHM6Ly9saXZlaW50ZW50Lm5ld3lvcmt0aW1lc2luZm8uY29tL2NsaWNrP3M9NzI4Njk5JmxpPVJSJm09YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcD1SUl8yMDI0MDMyOSZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UlMkZyZWxhdGVkJmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5VwNueXRCCmYGXa0GZhZKUZVSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAw~~) When I first became a writer, people said, âArenât you angry at America?â Anger, for me, is not a productive emotion. America, like so many other great world powers, has hurt lots of people. Many of them donât have the power and the ability to speak the truth of history. But where else in the world can a young writer like me emerge? I was born in a refugee camp. I was given one of the best educations that money can buy. There are these publishers across the American landscape who say, âDo the work that your heart burns to do.â There are journalists like you who say, âKalia, share your story.â Thereâs something here thatâs intrinsically America. So I donât hate America, I donât think my family hates America, but I think we understand what America has done. In the bookâs final section, your family returns to Laos and you describe this heartbreak that your mother feels revisiting a homeland that is no longer hers. What was the experience of finding a country that had changed? I had no idea how many stories were waiting there. I somehow thought that we had left with the stories that would be ours. For my mom, it was incredibly hard to realize that her brothers are no longer the same. The Hmong donât live in the high mountains anymore. The politics are different. The dangers are different. Here my parents are not American. There, in Laos, theyâre so American, which is such an interesting dynamic. How did that translate when you came back to America? My mom said that the moment the plane landed in Chicago, she felt like she was home, like all of America was home. Did that provide a resolution? A dawning. A realization at how everyone looks at my parents. In the Twin Cities, theyâre Hmong. Outside of the Twin Cities, theyâre Asian. In Southeast Asia, they were Asian Americans. Here, Iâm a Minnesota author. The moment I leave Minnesota, I become an American author. Here, Iâm Hmong American. The moment I leave Minnesota, Iâm Asian American. The moment I leave America, everybody says, âYouâre an American writer.â The ability to look at our lives again, to adventure to these places and to return allows us to see the scope of the journey. My mom and dad both saw the scope of that journey. EDITORSâ PICKS We publish many articles that touch on race. 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Prop stylist: Megan Hedgpeth.](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0TiaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyNC8wMy8yNy9tYWdhemluZS9qYW1haWNhbi1ydW5kb3duLXJlY2lwZS5odG1sP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3JmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTExODc0NSZubD1yYWNlJTJGcmVsYXRlZCZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTYyMDg1JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0QgpmBl2tBmYWSlGVUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAM~) [The Pure, Earthy Richness of a Beloved Jamaican Fish Stew It is a testament to the power of seasoning and steady, patient simmering. By Ligaya Mishan](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRn6TJdP0TiaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyNC8wMy8yNy9tYWdhemluZS9qYW1haWNhbi1ydW5kb3duLXJlY2lwZS5odG1sP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3JmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMjQwMzI5Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTExODc0NSZubD1yYWNlJTJGcmVsYXRlZCZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTYyMDg1JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0QgpmBl2tBmYWSlGVUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAM~) Invite your friends.
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